NISSAN GT-R LM NISMO

NISSAN GT-R LM NISMO
Nissan today declared itself ready to take on the world’s best
sports car manufacturers after revealing a glimpse of its Le Mans
challenger – the Nissan GT-R LM NISMO – during the commercial
break for Super Bowl XLIX.
Last year’s Super Bowl was the most watched television
programme in US television history with over 110 million viewers.
The 2015 game was therefore the perfect opportunity for Nissan’s
“With Dad” commercial (view at www.withdad.com) to air for the
first time, revealing the much-anticipated Nissan GT-R LM NISMO,
the car that will take on the best in the world in the race to glory at
the Le Mans 24 Hours.
In a bold move, the Japanese manufacturer has interpreted
the sport’s technical regulations in an innovative way, producing a
front-engined, front wheel drive car that is powered by a V6 3-litre
twin turbo petrol engine and a kinetic energy recovery system.
“It gave us great pride to reveal the Nissan
GT-R LM NISMO during the Super Bowl,” said
Roel de Vries, Global Head of Marketing and
Brand Strategy at Nissan.
“The combination of the Super Bowl and the
Le Mans 24 Hours – two of the most watched
sporting events in the world – presented us with
a unique opportunity to showcase our most ambitious motorsport
programme in recent times.
“The GT-R is our flagship road car,” he continued. “This, the
ultimate GT-R, continues a sporting bloodline that goes back
three decades with NISMO, the motorsport and performance
arm of Nissan. Le Mans drives innovation so success on the
track will lead to greater innovation in our road car range. We
are the new kids at Le Mans; our opponents are the best in the
world but we are ready.”
The new car will contest the LM P1 class of the FIA World
Endurance Championship, the highest category in world sports
car racing. Starting at Silverstone, UK on 12 April the series
travels around the world to Spa in Belgium, onto the Le Mans
24 Hours and Germany’s Nurburgring, before going global
with races in the US, Japan, China and the Middle East.
The FIA World Endurance Championship is the ultimate
proving ground for automotive companies as technological
gains on the track can carry through to road cars.
Racing car engineers are facing the same challenges as
road car engineers as the spotlight falls on energy efficiency.
With more technical freedom than Formula 1, the LM P1
engineers have ample opportunity to innovate.
“This is innovation that excites,” said
Shoichi Miyatani, President of NISMO.
“Sustainability is at the top of our
agenda and the technical regulations for
Le Mans give us the freedom to pursue
new ideas in this area. Our record at Le
Mans is third place overall so we have
unfinished business there.
“We want to win and we have the knowledge to do
that – for our customers, our employees and our fans. The
competition is exceptionally strong and we are excited by
the challenge.”
“Our LM P1 programme makes the
connection between NISMO on the road
and NISMO on the track, showcasing
our brand DNA to a global audience,”
explained Darren Cox, Global Head of
Brand, Marketing & Sales, NISMO.
“We are taking motorsport to the
masses, telling tales of technical innovation but also human
stories via all of the exciting communications channels
that are open to us now. We will innovate off the track
as well as on it so you can be assured that this is just the
beginning of the story.”
The intensive test programme for the Nissan GT-R LM
NISMO that began in Arizona last year continues in the US.
Nissan’s full LM P1 driver line-up will be revealed soon.
THE 2015
NISSAN GT-R LM NISMO
The Nissan GT-R LM NISMO is the ultimate Nissan GT-R, the purest expression
of innovation that excites. Competing in LM P1, the premier class of world sports
car racing, Nissan’s Le Mans car is like no other car before it.
A truly global effort, the GT-R has been created by a team of carefully
selected experts in Japan, the US and Europe. Unlike other LM P1 cars, the
GT-R’s V6 3-litre twin turbo petrol engine sits in the front of the front-wheeldrive car, while the hybrid power is harvested from the front driveline to
augment acceleration.
The man best placed to describe Nissan’s innovative LM P1 car is Ben
Bowlby, Nissan’s LM P1 Team Principal and Technical Director.
Q: Can you explain the how the different power sources work
on the GT-R?
A: “We have a very modern but conventional V6 3-litre twin turbo
petrol engine. This is a very efficient engine so it produces
a large amount of power using the allotted fuel
flow limit. The fuel flow limit is one of the new
regulations at Le Mans – we’re not limited by
the engine capacity or the boost pressure or
the RPM of the engine – we’re limited by how
many grammes of fuel per second we can
burn.
“So the more efficient you make the
engine the more power you have
because you are still burning the
same amount of fuel whether you are
efficient or inefficient so if you can
make a very efficient engine you get
a lot of power. We are burning a
smaller amount of fuel, around 30%
less than was used by a petrol engine
at Le Mans in 2013, for example.
“So we have a petrol engine efficiently
producing a certain amount of power and then
in addition to that we are using a kinetic energy
recovery system (ERS). The car is a mass,
travelling at velocity and as we slow it down for
the upcoming corner we harvest that kinetic
energy.
“We can then deploy that stored energy
to accelerate the car out of the corner and
because the energy recovery system can
release the stored energy very quickly it makes it
very powerful. Energy divided by the speed you
release that energy = power.
“Think about a stick of dynamite. That’s actually
quite a small amount of energy but it is released
in a spilt second so it makes a very big bang.
The same amount of energy released over a day
would hardly even manage to power a light bulb.
So it’s all about how fast you release the energy.
We want to release the energy very quickly
to get the car back up to speed very quickly
because it’s nice to spend lots of time at high
speed!
“The key is to store the energy and then release
it very quickly and that’s what makes our system
very competitive, providing us with a good
amount of power from the ERS, which we can
add to the internal combustion engine’s driving
power.”
Q: Is the GT-R a front-wheel-drive car?
A: “The Nissan GT-R LM NISMO is in
automotive-speak a front-engined, front-wheeldrive car. The internal combustion engine
drives the front wheels and the energy recovery
system harvests energy from the front wheels.
We’ve used the relatively low-powered internal
combustion engine to drive the front wheels and
then we add power from the ERS to augment
acceleration.”
Q: If the GT-R has all this power,
will it be faster than the other
manufacturer’s LM P1 cars?
A: “The LM P1 regulations for manufacturers
have four hybrid powertrain options, defined
by how much hybrid energy is released from
the ERS per lap of Le Mans (the Le Mans
track is used as the baseline circuit).
You can go in the 2 megajoule class where
you can deploy up to 2MJ of energy during
one lap of Le Mans and also use quite a lot
of fuel.
“You can go in the 4MJ class and get a little
less fuel, the 6MJ class with less still and
then there’s the 8MJ class where you get
the least fuel of all but the most recovered
energy for deployment and there’s no limit on
how powerful the system is, just how much
energy is used so you can either have an
awful lot of power for a very short time or a
small amount of power for a very long time.
“The fuel energy you have, which again can
be measured in megajoules, gets cut in
proportion to the amount of megajoules you
get from your ERS. The way it is worked out
by the governing body – the FIA and the
ACO – is that if you choose to recover more
energy and deploy that you actually end up
with more total energy, even though your fuel
energy has been cut slightly.
“The more megajoules you have the faster
you go. Each megajoule is worth an amount
of time per lap so if you are an 8MJ car
compared to a 2MJ car you should be faster
over the course of a lap.
“There are however some very big
challenges, one of which is that you have
to get the car down to the minimum weight
because every 10-12 kilos is about half
a second a lap around Le Mans so if you
have more weight in the car that slows you
down pretty significantly. The challenge is
to package a big, powerful energy recovery
system without going over the weight limit
and that is very hard to do. We’re going to be
really challenged to make our weight target
of 880 kilos for 2015 when half of the weight
of the car is the powertrain: engine, ERS and
the driveline - so that’s a very big challenge.”
Q: What about the tyres? The rears look
narrower than the front tyres!
A: “The front tyres on the Nissan GT-R LM
NISMO are bigger than the rear tyres – 14
inch wide front vs. 9 inch rear. This is due to
the way that mass is distributed in the car.
We have moved the weight bias forwards
to give us traction for the front-engined,
front-wheel drive. We’ve also moved the
aero forwards so we’ve moved the capacity
of the tyres forward to match the weight
distribution. So the aero centre of pressure,
the mass centre of gravity and the tyre
capacity are all in harmony and that means
we have bigger tyres at the front than the
rear.”
Q: Why doesn’t the Nissan GT-R
LM NISMO look like the other
manufacturer’s LM P1 cars?
A: “The regulations have allowed us the
freedom to create a significantly different
looking car. Nissan are bold challengers
who are prepared to innovate in order
to get a high performance outcome so
we’ve turned the whole concept of the
conventional LM P1 car of 2014 on its
head. The result is that our car looks
different as the cockpit has been moved
significantly rearwards to accommodate the
engine at the front of the car.”
Configuration:
Wheels:
Front engine. Front-wheel-drive
BBS centre-lock, magnesium forged 16”x13”
front and 16”x9” rear
Engine:
Nissan VRX 30A NISMO: 3.0 litre, 60 degree
V6, direct injection gasoline twin-turbo
Michelin 31/71-16 front, 20/71-16 rear radials
Transmission:
Electrical:
5-speed + reverse sequential gearbox with
pneumatic paddle shift system. Epicyclic
final drive reduction with hydraulic limited
slip differential. Tilton 4-plate carbon clutch
assembly
Cosworth engine control unit featuring: Engine
control, gearbox control;
Driver adjustable
traction control, Anti-lag system control,
Brake-by-wire, lift-and-coast fuel conservation,
Drive-by-wire throttle control and ERS
deployment strategy control
Chassis:
FIA Homologated weight: 880 kg. Right-hand
driving position
68 litre capacity FT3 fuel tank featuring electric
lift and feed pumps. ERS housed ahead and
beneath driver’s feet in self-contained module.
NISSAN GT-R LM NISMO
Tires:
Interior:
NISMO 5-point harness
Lifeline lightweight extinguisher system
Data / display system:
Bodywork:
Cosworth Electronics with NISMO steering
wheel mounted LCD
Carbon-composite body panels. Polycarbonate
windscreen with hard coating
CFD and full
scale wind tunnel developed ultra high efficiency
bodywork geometry, adjustable rear wing.
Dimensions:
Suspension:
Penske dampers with four-way adjustment front
and rear, hydraulic rear anti-roll bar system.
Brakes:
6-piston front and 4-piston rear calipers. NISMO
Brake-by-Wire active brake ERS blending.
Driver adjustable brake bias.
Length: 4.645m
Width: 1.9m
Height: 1.03m
Minimum weight: 880kg
Full tank capacity: 68L
The first driver of Nissan’s Le Mans challenger, the
Nissan GT-R LM NISMO, has been revealed as Marc Gene.
The Spanish ace has an exemplary record in LM P1 racing
with eight LM P1 Le Mans 24 Hours races under his belt.
Gene’s experience is much in demand and he has been test
driver at Scuderia Ferrari since 2005.
Gene will provide Nissan NISMO with a firm foundation
of experience in its driving squad. He describes Le Mans as
“the best race in the world” and already knows how it feels
to win the great race outright after doing just that in 2009.
2009 LE
MANS 24
HOURS
WINNER
2010
SEBRING
12 HOUR
WINNER
2012 6
HOURS
OF SPA
WINNER
Q: How important do you think it is for a new
team to have an experienced driver like yourself?
A: “Nissan NISMO is a great team already. From
the very beginning I have experienced a very good
atmosphere in the team. The mechanics and engineers
are all very professional and most have Le Mans
experience. From my side, my experience in works
teams will definitely help Nissan as I have already
faced the challenge we are all now facing. Our goal
is to reach the podium and ultimately win Le Mans.
However we are all aware that at Le Mans there are
no shortcuts and we will only achieve our goals with
time and hard work, especially now that it is probably
the most competitive Le Mans ever with four different
manufacturers.”
Q: What does it feel like to win Le Mans?
“We said at the start of our driver search that we wanted
an established LM P1 driver who could provide the extra
knowledge and experience that can only be gained by
having ‘been there and done it’,” said Darren Cox, Global
Head of Brand, Marketing & Sales, NISMO.
“In Marc we have found a Le Mans winner, who has
raced for two LM P1 works teams and can provide a guiding
hand for the other drivers who are stepping up to LM P1.
We are very happy to welcome Marc to Nissan and look
forward to the development of a successful relationship.”
2013 LE
MANS
THIRD
PLACE
2014 LE
MANS
SECOND
PLACE
FERRARI
FORMULA
1 TEST
DRIVER
Q: You will compete in the full FIA World Endurance
Championship season. What are your expectations for
the year ahead?
A: “This season we should just focus on learning about and
improving the car every time we head out onto the track,
whether for testing or racing. Making it to the finish would
already be an achievement on it’s own. I hope we can show
that the car is competitive, especially at Le Mans.”
Q: What can you tell us about the Nissan GT-R LM
NISMO from a driver’s perspective?
A: “I like the aggressive look of the car, which is a
consequence of a well-thought and different design, not
seen before at Le Mans. From the very first laps I felt very
comfortable. I could feel the very powerful engine and high
efficiency of the aerodynamics.”
A: “Winning Le Mans was the most intense feeling
I have ever had as a racing driver. I was lucky to be
in the car for the final stint and on that long last lap,
with all the marshals congratulating me and with more
than 200,000 spectators cheering, it was impossible
to contain my feelings. Then came the podium and all
Q: Are you happy to become a Nissan driver?
you can see is this huge crowd, thousands of fans who
have followed the race from the beginning.”
P1 GT-R in the most demanding and prestigious race in the
world is something I am very proud of.”
A: “I am delighted and very excited to drive for Nissan. I
have always looked closely at Nissan and it’s motorsport
programmes, especially at the GT-R activities and of course it’s
road car models. Now to be competing with Nissan in the LM
CAREER
HIGHLIGHTS
2014
• Second place at the Le Mans 24 Hours with Audi
• Winner of the 6 Hours of Spa (WEC) with JOTA
• Ferrari F1 Test Driver (2005-present day)
2013
• Third place at the Le Mans 24 Hours with Audi
• Third place in the 6 Hours of Spa (WEC) with Audi
2012
• Fifth place at the Le Mans 24 Hours with Audi
• Winner of the 6 Hours of Spa (WEC)
2011
• Fourth place in the Le Mans 24 Hours with Peugeot
• Second place in the Sebring 12 Hours with Peugeot
2010
• Winner of Sebring 12 Hours with Peugeot
• Le Mans 24 Hours with Peugeot – DNF in 22nd hour
whilst running second
2009
• Winner of the Le Mans 24 Hours with Peugeot – first
Spanish winner
2008
• Second place at the Le Mans 24 Hours with Peugeot
• Runner-up in European Le Mans Series with Peugeot
• Winner of 1000kms of Spa with Peugeot
2007
• Third place in European Le Mans Series with
Peugeot – Winner at Monza, Silverstone and
Interlagos
• Le Mans 24 Hours with Peugeot – DNF after 22
hours
DRIVER
PROFILE
2005 - present day
• Ferrari F1 Test Driver
2001 - 2004
• BMW WilliamsF1 Team test and reserve driver (fifth
place at 2003 Italian GP)
1999 - 2000
• FIA Formula 1 World Championship with Minardi –
Sixth place in 1999 Nurburgring F1 GP
1998
• Open Fortuna by Nissan Champion
1997
• International F3000
1996
• Golden Cup Superformula Champion
1994-1995
• British F3 – Rookie of the Year in ‘94
1993
• European Formula Ford - Second place European
Championship and Formula Ford Festival
1992
• Spanish Formula Ford
1987-1991
• Two-time Spanish Karting Champion (88 and 90)
Date of birth:
Place of birth: Nationality: Lives:
Languages:
Twitter:
29 March 1974
Sabadell, Spain
Spanish
Barcelona, Spain
Spanish, Catalan, English, French, Italian and German.
@marc_gene
When Nissan was looking for an experienced LM P1 driver, Marc Gene’s name
came up over and over again. The Spanish racer provides the experience that any
new LM P1 team needs. He has been there and done it, winning Le Mans outright in
2009.
Marc’s racing career began in karting when he was 13 years-old. Over
the years he worked his way right up the single-seater ladder, arriving in
Formula One in 1999. After two seasons with Minardi he received
a call from Sir Frank Williams, who asked him to join the
Williams F1 team as a test driver. Then in 2005,
Marc took up the role of Test Driver for Scuderia
Ferrari, a position that he still holds today.
Sports cars beckoned for Marc in 2007
and he joined what was then the brand new
Peugeot LM P1 programme. It proved to be
a successful relationship, the highlight being
Marc’s victory at the 2009 Le Mans 24
Hours, when he became the first Spaniard
to win the great race.
Multi-lingual Marc is a great
academic who loves to read and to
learn about all manner of subjects.
He has a degree in Economics
and was once an auditor at
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
In 2015 Nissan will enter the Nissan
GT-R LM NISMO into the full FIA World
Endurance Championship, marking a
return to the premier class at the Le Mans
24 Hours for the Japanese manufacturer.
Nissan will challenge for victory with
an innovative approach and with a truly
exciting product that represents the next
generation of the Nissan GT-R.
“We are excited to be going headto-head with the best sports car racing
manufacturers in the world,” commented
Roel de Vries, Global Head of Marketing
and Brand Strategy at Nissan.
“LM P1 is a proving ground for
technological innovation, especially
when it comes to the power sources
of the future. In 2014 three different
manufacturers using three different
powertrain combinations won races. If you
ever needed proof that LM P1 is the sharp
end, this is it.”
Nissan might have been absent from
the top class at Le Mans for 16 years
but the company has been very active
in other categories, building an envied
sports car ladder that runs from the new
LM P3 category, through a world-beating
engine supply programme in LM P2, and
onto the top step to LM P1 via the ACO’s
clever ‘Garage 56’ programme, a unique
class at Le Mans reserved for innovative
technology that falls outside of the normal
regulations
“Our LM P3 engine supply programme
is a new venture for us but if it is nearly as
successful as our LM P2 programme we
will be very proud of our achievements,
said Shoichi Miyatani, President of
NISMO.
“Our LM P2 engine has powered
teams to championship victories and class
wins at Le Mans. Our Garage 56 projects
have led us to LM P1 and the innovations
that we have employed. Enormous
lessons were learned from the very heavy
hybridisation of the Nissan ZEOD RC and
we’ve carried those lessons over into this
project.”
LM P1 cars are the most extreme
sports cars in racing today so, for Nissan
and NISMO, the opportunity to innovate at
the highest level could not be missed.
“These cars represent the pinnacle of
current racing technology: huge energy
recovery systems, super fuel-efficient
engines and wild aerodynamics, creating
extremely fast cars for their weight and
endurance, said Nissan’s LM P1 Team
Principal, Ben Bowlby.
“LM P1 is a proving ground
for technological innovation,
especially when it comes to the
power sources of the future”
“These are 24-hour racing cars that
cover practically a whole Formula One
season in one Le Mans race. It’s a very
different challenge to F1 and much more
relevant to what’s going on in road cars.
If you drive from say London to Edinburgh
you expect the car to get through the
miles and be fast, stable, comfortable and
safe and provide the handling and grip
you might need if you have to come off
the motorway and take some back roads
– that’s the sort of challenge that Le Mans
represents. It’s all about having a fast,
efficient and safe car.”
The FIA World Endurance
Championship provides manufacturers
with the opportunity to develop new
technologies for its road car range. With
energy-efficiency being the key, there is
no greater test for technology than a 24-hour endurance
race where the gap between first and second place can
be a matter of seconds after 24 hours of racing.
“It is firmly our intention that technology developed on
the LM P1 car will transfer to Nissan road cars,” said de
Vries.
“We are developing ultra-efficient V6 twin turbo of
the configuration and lineage of the Nissan GT-R. This
is a more efficient but equally powerful direct injection
solution so it’s a potential forerunner to future GT-R
engines. Also the kinetic energy recovery technology
that we’re developing through racing could indeed have
potential for future road car applications.”
Nissan is a global car manufacturer so it makes sense
that the LM P1 programme is a truly global project.
“The car was built in the US and will complete its
initial test programme there before moving to Europe
for the start of the FIA World Endurance Championship
season,” explained Miyatani.
“Engineers and mechanics from Japan has been fully
integrated into the programme and, just like any race
team nowadays, we have selected our personnel from all
over the world.”
Taking on the best in the world and competing to win
is a daunting task for Nissan. The competition is wellestablished and the racing in the FIA World Endurance
Championship is ultra-close but this is a challenge that
Nissan has accepted and the Nissan NISMO team will
fight to get onto the top step of the podium like it has
never fought before.
“All I want is to be sure that the team did its best,”
said Darren Cox, Global Head of Brand, Marketing &
Sales, NISMO.
“What we’re aiming for is to have executed to the
best of our ability and that’s what we’re focusing on.
There’s a lot we can’t control, for example, we don’t
know where our rivals are going to be when we get to
the first race. If we’ve all done our best I’ll be delighted
and good results will come if we continue to do our best.
So our goals and targets are simply to do our best. I
think that, as a group, our best will lead to some great
results.”
Nissan has also announced three multiyear partnerships that will feature prominently
in its LM P1 programme.
Swiss watchmaker TAG Heuer is
the Official Watch Partner and Official
Timekeeping Partner. The LM P1 drivers will all
wear TAG Heuer watches and the partnership
will be activated globally by both parties,
with several exciting developments to be
announced in the coming months.
Motul is the Official Lubricants Partner
for the programme, working closely with
NISMO’s engine department to develop
high-performance products to enhance
competitiveness and efficiency. Motul has
enjoyed a long-standing relationship with
NISMO over the past two decades and this
natural expansion into the LM P1 programme
comes soon after the Super GT Championship
victory for the iconic #23 MOTUL AUTECH
GT-R.
The LM P1 programme will use tyres
supplied by Michelin. The French manufacturer
has developed tyres especially for the Nissan
GT-R LM NISMO and been an integral part of
the car’s extensive test programme.
PRESS RELEASE FROM OUR PARTNER:
youth to love it. Look at the car, it’s powerful,
outstanding and disruptive.”
In fact Nissan NISMO arrives with key
technological innovations, with a front-engined,
front wheel drive car that is powered by a V6
TAG Heuer becomes the Official Timekeeper
and Official Watch Partner of Nissan NISMO for
their arrival in the mythical Le Mans 24 and the
FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) in
the LM P1 category. First sight of the partnership
came on the 1st of February,
during the Super Bowl, no less!
Super Bowl adverts
have become a cultural
phenomenon in recent years:
the commercials are greatly
prized and watched by over
100 million people in the US
and potentially 1 billion around
the world.
Not surprising then that Nissan chose this
striking moment to present its brand new GT-R
LM NISMO - that will be racing in the WEC in
energy recovery system.
TAG Heuer will assist Nissan for its first
season in the LM P1 category of the FIA WEC
as their Official timekeeper and watch, a great
challenge for both.
TAG Heuer has a long history at Le Mans
starting back in the 70s with Ferrari and then
with 5 consecutive wins, with Peugeot Sport in
2009 and with Audi Sport from 2010 to 2013.
Let’s hope this is a good omen for the GT-R LM
NISMO!
“We are delighted to welcome TAG Heuer
to the Nissan NISMO team,” said Darren Cox,
Global Head of Brand, Marketing & Sales,
NISMO.
“The TAG Heuer brand is synonymous with
the highest category, LM P1 - as its strategy
success at Le Mans and we will do everything
of communication is based on a disruptive,
we can to continue this tradition of success. We
aggressive and bold attitude.
share many values with TAG Heuer, not least
The red car was gleaming on the screens,
as well as TAG Heuer’s logos, to be seen on
the car and on the drivers’ overalls. A stunning
touchdown for the Swiss brand!
Jean-Claude Biver, CEO of TAG Heuer and
our passion for motorsport and the recognition
of what it can do for a brand. It’s great to have
them on the team as we begin this new global
challenge.”
Marc Gené has been announced as their 1st
President of Watch division of LVMH group,
driver, his experience will be of great help: he
explains the reasons for this alliance: “TAG
was part of the Peugeot Sport winning adventure
Heuer’s legitimate ties to endurance races
in 2009 at Le Mans and with Audi Sport in 2012,
in motor sports are without rival. I wanted an
2013 and 2014.
innovating partner to come back on these tracks.
“Nissan NISMO is the perfect challenger, a
“Nissan NISMO is the perfect challenger, a pioneer regarding the
technology of the car and regarding its way to communicate specifically
with the young through their massive presence on social media”
3-litre twin turbo petrol engine and a kinetic
The drivers will have the chance to wear
a Monaco chronograph, a tribute to Steve
pioneer regarding the technology of the car and
McQueen, and to the legendary movie, Le Mans.
regarding its way to communicate specifically
The blue-eyed icon was wearing the blue-
with the young through their massive presence
squared chronograph, which then became an
on social media.” He added “Motor racing is a
iconic piece of TAG Heuer. A new page of this
fascinating universe, we need to educate today’s
history is about to be written!
MOTUL AND NISSAN PARTNERSHIP GOES GLOBAL
PRESS RELEASE FROM OUR PARTNER:
development of the LM P1 Hybrid which will
We can’t wait to see the Nissan GT-R LM
successful partnership. LM P1 is going to
culminated in a further Championship title for
significantly on more than 200 cars which
compete against Audi, Porsche and Toyota
NISMO being let loose on Les Hunaudières
be our toughest challenge yet so we need
Motul to add to the seven already achieved
have enjoyed great success at La Sarthe.
in the WEC, and which will exclusively use
at full speed!”
partners we can rely on. Motul was the
over the last 11 years with both factory and
The most recent technical partners to
obvious choice for us.”
private teams competing in Super GT.
have claimed class victories are Greaves
Motul lubricants for the gearbox and engine.
President of the Management Board at
One of the most keenly anticipated
Motul, Monsieur Hervé Amelot, expressed
“We are delighted to welcome Motul to
our LM P1 programme,” commented NISMO
President, Shoichi Miyatani.
motorsport launches will soon be seen
the enthusiasm felt by everyone at the
across the world, and the famous red Motul
advent of this new prototype due to compete
we trust after working
logo will be featured globally as a result.
from 2015 onwards at the highest level
together for over a decade
of international sportscar racing: “We are
in Super GT. We have just
extremely happy and proud to
celebrated the 2014 Super
be returning to the top class of
GT Championship win
competition at Le Mans.
for the #23 MOTUL
The lubricant of choice for many top
sports prototype and GT teams at the 24
Hours of Le Mans has been confirmed as the
official lubricant partner of the new Nissan
LM P1 hybrid programme in the FIA World
“What’s more it’s with Nissan
Endurance Championship, which includes
NISMO, maintaining the excellent
the legendary French endurance classic.
working relationship we have had
Launched today, the new and innovative
Nissan GT-R LM NISMO has been built in
North America in close co-operation with
Motul. The French-headquartered company
has worked with the Japanese marque on the
together for the last 11 years and
with whom we share a culture of
innovation and ingenuity.
“The technical choices made
by Nissan NISMO are proof of that.
“Motul is a brand that
AUTECH GT-R so
it is a proven and
One of the world’s leading motorsport
Tsugio Matsuda and Ronnie Quintarelli
lubricant specialists, Motul has a long-
lifted the Champions’ trophy not only due
standing and extremely successful technical
to their talent behind the wheel, but also
thanks to the performance and reliability of
“Motul is a brand that
we trust after working
together for over a
decade in Super GT”
the specialist Motul lubricants used in Super
GT in the Nissan GT-R NISMO GT500s –
“NISMO Competition Oil by Motul”.
This range is also available for GT-R
owners via the NISMO parts catalogue.
Motul has, of course, an even more
Motorsport in 2011 and JOTA Sport in 2014,
both in the LMP2 category and powered by
Nissan NISMO engines.
The new LM P1 challenge for 2015 is
one that has been accepted and embraced
by everyone at NISMO and Motul, and
represents for the lubricant company a
technical pinnacle which will reflect all the
expertise and experience gained during the
successful years of competition to date.
The official pre-season test sessions for
relationship with Nissan and its motorsport
historic association with the world’s most
the World Endurance Championship, The
and performance arm, NISMO, which
famous sportscar race, the 24 Hours of Le
Prologue, will take place on 28/29th March
stretches back to 2003.
Mans, as can be seen from grainy black and
at Circuit Paul Ricard in the South of France,
white photos which date back to 1953!
and this will be the first time that the LM P1
As a partner to the official factory team
in Japan’s sportscar championship, Super
For more than 60 years the iconic Motul
GT, Motul last year celebrated its 100th race
logo has not only been seen on track-side
alongside NISMO Motul Autech. The season
advertisements and banners, but more
Nissan will be seen on the same track at the
same time as all of its opponents.
us claim three titles in four years, Michelin stood out as the
natural tyre partner for Nissan’s latest project.
“The Nissan GT-R LM NISMO is a fantastic car. It will
serve as a valuable laboratory for the future but will also
v
PRESS RELEASE FROM OUR PARTNER:
Michelin has been nominated as the tyre partner for
Nissan’s LM P1 endurance racing programme and will
develop and provide solutions on behalf of the Japanese
carmaker.
16 inch
18 inch
The Nissan GT-R LM NISMO will race on Michelin
31/71-16 (front) and 20/71-16 (rear) tyres.
“We are very proud to have been chosen by Nissan
to develop tyres for its LM P1 programme,” says Michelin
Motorsport Director Pascal Couasnon
“After our successful associations during Nissan’s 2012
and 2014 ‘Garage 56’ projects, as well as our success
together in Japan’s Super GT championship which has seen
make high demands on our tyres from the word go. The
development of tyres for this car will be a challenge and we
at Michelin didn’t hesitate to rise to it.”
“LM P1 confronts manufacturers with a huge number
of technical challenges,” said Darren Cox, Global Head of
Brand, Marketing & Sales, NISMO.
“It was therefore vital that we have a tyre partner who
is willing to push the boundaries with us so that we can
innovate to the extreme with the Nissan GT-R LM NISMO.
Michelin was a valued partner to us during our ‘Garage 56’
projects so we are delighted to be working with them on
our LM P1 programme.”
FURTHER INFORMATION:
Lindsay Morle
Global Motorsport Communications
LM P1 PR Manager
Phone: +44 7971 481078
Email: [email protected]
OTHER CONTACTS:
Jane Johnstone
Global Motorsport Communications
LM P1 Project Manager (Mar Coms)
Phone: +44 7979 710646
Email: [email protected]
Paul Ryan
Global Motorsports Communications
LM P1 Marketing Manager
Phone: +1 678 644 0404
Email: [email protected]
Tim Scott
Commercial Director
Nissan Global Motorsports
Phone: +44 1327 856016
Email: [email protected]